(Un)Sustainable Peacebuilding: Nato's Suitability for Postconflict Reconstruction in Multiactor Environments (Report) (Un)Sustainable Peacebuilding: Nato's Suitability for Postconflict Reconstruction in Multiactor Environments (Report)

(Un)Sustainable Peacebuilding: Nato's Suitability for Postconflict Reconstruction in Multiactor Environments (Report‪)‬

Global Governance 2011, Jan-March, 17, 1

    • £2.99
    • £2.99

Publisher Description

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, NATO has progressively adapted itself to the new strategic environment. This has meant a shift from a defensive posture to a more proactive risk management strategy. A key component of this mandate is contributions to international peacemaking and peacebuilding operations. In both the Balkans and Afghanistan, NATO has worked to utilize its military assets to create and maintain peace so that civilian organizations can administer aid, development programs, and good governance projects. These multifaceted operations, however, are complex and rely on well-structured relationships between the different civilian-led international organizations on the ground and NATO. Sadly, as the case of Afghanistan illustrates, these organizations have proved woefully inadequate in terms of providing sustainable peacebuilding. The hypothesis is that international organizations do not play well on the ground in conflict or postconflict environments because they were meant to manage a balance of power, rather than an absence of power. These organizations are more worried about their bureaucratic turf than they are sustainable outcomes. KEYWORDS: NATO, peacekeeping, Afghanistan. SINCE 1989, THE WEST HAS BEEN CONFRONTED BY THE STARK REALITY THAT weak states can pose as great a danger to international stability and security as a strong state. If the balance of power was the preoccupation of strategists in centuries past, it is the lack of power that concerns most today. From the Balkans to Africa, across the Middle East through South Asia and into the Pacific, weak states have resulted in conflicts that have regularly dragged the international community into their quagmires of death, destruction, and stagnation. Originally created in 1949 as a defensive military alliance to maintain the balance of power in Europe, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) finds itself increasingly acting as a proactive risk manager--first in the Balkans and, most recently, in Afghanistan. But how sustainable is NATO's involvement? This question is especially pertinent considering that the main challenges facing weak and failing states--a lack of governance, poverty, endemic crime, shadow economies--are far beyond the reach of NATO's warships, tanks, and missiles.

GENRE
Politics & Current Affairs
RELEASED
2011
1 January
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
38
Pages
PUBLISHER
Lynne Rienner Publishers
SIZE
305.3
KB

More Books Like This

NATO in the Post-Cold War Era NATO in the Post-Cold War Era
2022
The Nature of Future Conflict The Nature of Future Conflict
1995
Challenges, Capability and Will: Is NATO Relevant in the Twenty-first Century? Role in Counterterrorism, ISIS, ISIL, Threats from Putin and Russia to Baltic Members and Poland, Cyber, U.S. Reassurance Challenges, Capability and Will: Is NATO Relevant in the Twenty-first Century? Role in Counterterrorism, ISIS, ISIL, Threats from Putin and Russia to Baltic Members and Poland, Cyber, U.S. Reassurance
2017
The Growing Dimensions of Security The Growing Dimensions of Security
2018
Peace Support Operations and the U.S. Military Peace Support Operations and the U.S. Military
2020
The Future of NATO: a New Organization for New Threats?(A More Perfect Union) (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) The Future of NATO: a New Organization for New Threats?(A More Perfect Union) (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)
2004

More Books by Global Governance

Human Security: A Challenge to International Law? Human Security: A Challenge to International Law?
2005
Nonstate Actors in the International Legal Order: The Israeli-Hezbollah Conflict and the Law of Self-Defense (Report) Nonstate Actors in the International Legal Order: The Israeli-Hezbollah Conflict and the Law of Self-Defense (Report)
2009
Claiming Rights Under Global Governance: Children's Rights in Argentina (Case Study) Claiming Rights Under Global Governance: Children's Rights in Argentina (Case Study)
2007
"Our Poverty Is a World Full of Dreams": Reforming the World Bank (1). "Our Poverty Is a World Full of Dreams": Reforming the World Bank (1).
2005
The Helmet and the Hoe: Linkages Between United Nations Development Assistance and Conflict Management. The Helmet and the Hoe: Linkages Between United Nations Development Assistance and Conflict Management.
2003
Global Governance As a Perspective on World Politics. Global Governance As a Perspective on World Politics.
2006